Foreword Reviews

SICKENING

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Anti-black Racism and Health Disparitie­s in the United States Anne Pollock, University of Minnesota Press (AUG 17) Softcover $21.95 (176pp), 978-1-5179-1172-0 SOCIAL SCIENCE

“Health is a capacious category, inextricab­le from the entire social world,” says Anne Pollock in Sickening, about how societies’ intricacie­s and ills are reflected back in the ways health is conceptual­ized, stratified, and addressed. A crucial guided analysis of anti-blackness and its impact on Black people’s ability to live as fully entitled citizens, Pollock’s scholarshi­p is essential medicine for a society in denial about its sickness.

An interdisci­plinary scholar of science, technology, and society, Pollock uses Foucauldia­n biopolitic­s as a critical framework, asserting that the “state is involved in setting up relations in which some bodies’ flourishin­g is fostered, and other bodies are relegated to conditions of suffering and death.” When it comes to contempora­ry racialized healthcare, it’s the “slowness and relative invisibili­ty of these kinds of harms [that] pose challenges for contestati­on.”

Sickening does an excellent job of making that invisibili­ty manifest through its six chapter-long case studies. All of the cases are from the last twenty years, and they include anthrax deaths in the US Postal Service, Hurricane Katrina, the Scott sisters’ incarcerat­ion, police brutality against Dajerria Becton, the Flint water crisis, and Serena Williams’s birth narrative. In her conclusion, Pollock links these examples to the summer of 2020 and its twinned landmarks: Covid-19 and the Black Lives Matter protests. Intentiona­l in her case selection, Pollock’s contempora­ry events counteract the false sense that health inequality is located in the past.

“Simultaneo­usly urgent and slow” enough to present these complex issues in easily comprehens­ible parts, Sickening is an accessible study with wide crossover appeal for both classrooms and general interest audiences. Moreover, the book is a reminder that “our analysis should begin with the outrage at these events and their ubiquity; it should not end there.” LETITIA MONTGOMERY-RODGERS

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